“I've got no kick coming, thank you,” said Fraser.

“Good!”

The sheriff relapsed into sombre silence. There was a troubled look in the keen eyes that the Texan did not understand. Fraser waited for the officer to develop the object of his visit, and it was set down to his credit. A weaker man would have rushed at once into excuses and explanations. But in the prisoner's quiet, steely eyes, in the close-shut mouth and salient jaw, in the set of his well-knit figure, Sheriff Brandt found small room for weakness. Whoever he was, this man was one who could hold his own in the strenuous game of life.

“My friend,” said the sheriff abruptly, “you and I are up against it. There is going to be trouble in town to-night.”

The level, gray eyes looked questioningly at the sheriff.

“You butted into grief a-plenty when you lined up with the cattlemen in this sheep war. Who do you ride for?”

“I'm not riding for anybody,” responded Fraser. “I just arrived from Texas. Didn't even know there was a feud on.”

Brandt laughed incredulously. “That will sound good to a jury, if your case ever comes to that stage. How do you expect to explain Billy Faulkner's death?”

“Is there any proof I killed him?”

“Some. You were recognized by two men last night while you were trying to escape. You carried a rifle that uses the same weight bullet as the one we dug out of Billy. When you attacked Tom Peake you dropped that rifle, and in your getaway hadn't time to pick it up again. That is evidence enough for a Wyoming jury, in the present state of public opinion.”